Across
- 4. Ancestor An ancestral group of organisms that is shared by multiple lineage groups; evidence for this includes universal DNA use and similar embryonic developmental stages.
- 6. Structures Structures not developed from a common ancestor that share a dissimilar developmental pattern. These are results of convergent evolution.
- 7. Radiation Characterized by multiple species being formed from a single common ancestor as they adapt to different environments.
- 8. Isolation A cause of speciation where a population is physically separated by geographic barriers, such as a canyon or river, leading to different adaptations over time.
- 13. Selection The identification by humans of desirable traits in plants and animals, and the steps taken to enhance those traits in future generations.
- 14. Selection The process by which individuals better adapted to their environment are more likely to survive and reproduce than other members of the same species.
- 15. Isolation When differences between separated populations prohibit them from breeding with one another.
- 16. The total disappearance of a species; often caused by environmental changes over millennia.
Down
- 1. The evolutionary process by which biological populations evolve to become distinct species, often occurring when populations can no longer successfully interbreed.
- 2. Rock Layers Layers of rock where fossils are found; according to the law of superposition, the oldest layers (and fossils) are at the bottom.
- 3. Bottleneck A type of genetic drift where a population's genetic diversity is reduced after a significant reduction in size due to a random event like a natural disaster.
- 4. A diagram used to show evolutionary relationships; the organism at the bottom represents the oldest common ancestor.
- 5. of the Fittest The process in which organisms better adapted to their environment have a better chance of surviving and reproducing.
- 9. Structures Structures developed from a common ancestor that share a similar developmental pattern. These are results of divergent evolution.
- 10. An individual organism's reproductive success in surviving and producing viable offspring.
- 11. Structure A structure an organism has that is no longer useful but is retained because a common ancestor found it useful (e.g., hip bones in whales or the human appendix).
- 12. The driving force behind variation that makes evolution possible.
- 17. Fossils Fossil records (such as those of the horse or whale) that show the most significant overall changes and intermediate forms between ancient ancestors and modern descendants.
